“Micro”-transaction’ed
@stux I’ll be honest, though. The physical games market it rife with speculation. What used to cost $5 at a flea market has now ballooned to $100s of dollars for extremely common games.

On the other hand, GOG.com and Steam have been lifesavers because I can buy actual good games for less than $1, often DRM-free.

@atomicpoet @stux true but as WB/Discovery have shown with their tax write-off crap digital content can removed on a whim.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/paultassi/2023/12/02/playstation-is-deleting-tv-shows-players-paid-for-thanks-to-warner-bros/

PlayStation Is Deleting TV Shows Players Paid For Thanks To Warner Bros.

Sony is deleting shows that you may have paid for through the PlayStation Store thanks to a crumbling deal with Warner Bros.

Forbes
@Sh4d0w_H34rt GOG.com is DRM-free. Even if publishers remove it from the store, I still own it.
@atomicpoet if it were normal delisting, yes, but as I understand it, if a property is written off for tax purposes, it can not be redistributed in anyway. Prior examples of WB/Discovery write-offs were followed by reports of those purchased titles being removed from users' libraries.
@Sh4d0w_H34rt GOG.com lets you keep game installers on your own hard drive. The only way for license holders to remove it from your library is for them to physically show up to your house.

If that were a probability, why don’t they confiscate your DVDs and game discs too?